![]() Sign for Pheasant Lane Mall on Daniel Webster Highway, November 2020 | |
![]() | |
Location | Nashua, New Hampshire, United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 42°42′06″N 71°26′15″W / 42.70167°N 71.43750°W |
Address | 310 Daniel Webster Highway |
Opening date | July 23, 1986[1] |
Management | Simon Property Group |
Owner | Simon Property Group |
No. of stores and services | 139[2] |
No. of anchor tenants | 5 (4 open, 1 vacant) |
Total retail floor area | 979,427 square feet (90,992 m2)[3] |
No. of floors | 2 |
Public transit access | ![]() |
Website | www |
Pheasant Lane Mall is a shopping mall in south Nashua, New Hampshire. With a floor area 979,427 square feet (90,992 m2), it is the second-largest mall in the state. Located just south of Exit 1 of the F.E. Everett Turnpike (U.S. Route 3) in Nashua and directly at northbound exit-only Exit 91 off US 3 in Tyngsborough, Massachusetts, the property straddles the state line, although the entire mall is in New Hampshire.
As of 2025, the mall has about 139 stores and kiosks, including four anchor stores: Dick's Sporting Goods, JCPenney, Macy's, and Target with one vacant anchor last occupied by Sears, plus 15 restaurants. Since 2012 it has been owned and managed by Simon Property Group of Indianapolis.
Proximity to the border has long drawn shoppers from Massachusetts seeking to take advantage of New Hampshire's lack of a sales tax.
Approximately one third of the parking lot and water runoff area is located in Tyngsborough. Shoppers who park in front of the former Sears entrance closer to Buffalo Wild Wings walk across the state line in front of the building on the sidewalk to get to and from their cars. The JCPenney store was originally built with a square corner that reached slightly across the border into Massachusetts, but was then modified to an unusual pentagonal shape at the state line to keep it entirely within New Hampshire by a few inches. Without that modification, the entire mall would have been subject to Massachusetts sales taxes on non-clothing items, even though only a few inches of the structure was in Massachusetts.[4]
It is second in size among New Hampshire malls only to The Mall at Rockingham Park in Salem.